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Diapositiva 1

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... about Bob Marley, the colours of the Reggae's flag are green, yellow and red. ... at the beginning they helped me, then I did it by myself. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diapositiva 1


1
(No Transcript)
2
The digital portfolio to make formal, non formal
and informal learning visible
  • Training and discussion laboratory
  • Rome, March, 27th 2008
  • Anna Maria Ajello Cristina Belardi
  • University of Rome Sapienza

3
Overview
  1. A brief introduction the history of portfolio
  2. Assessing NFL and IFL in the European context.
  3. A project for recognising NF and IF learning of
    young disadvantaged people
  4. The portfolio as an assessing tool
  5. The construction of a digital portfolio

4
The history of portfolio recently
  • European Union
  • Debate about the portfolio as a useful tool to
    make visible and to prove what a person is able
    to do
  • From a lifelong and life wide learning point of
    view

5
The ancient history of portfolio
  • Tool used by artists like painters and
    handicrafts
  • to show their best products and their competences
    to their prospects

6
Another recent history of portfolio
  • Contribution of cognitive psychology and
    sociocultural psychology to the science of
    evaluation
  • More complex ways of considering learning and
    knowing
  • brought to elaborate evaluating tools like the
    portfolio- that could fit for new assessing
    pourposes and processes (authentic assessment)

7
Assessing NFL and IFL in the European context
8
In the European context acknowledged
  • Important role to lifelong learning (to change
    the job, mobility etc.)
  • Importance of every kind of learning, acquired in
    different type of contexts
  • (F-formal, NF-non formal, IF-informal)

9
(Rough) differences among F, NF and IF learning
Type of learning Context Certifications Intentional Structured
Formal learning School, training courses etc. Yes Yes Yes
Non-formal learning Outside the institutional and educational contexts (e.g. lessons at home to learn how to play guitar) No Yes Yes
Informal learning Daily life activities (work, leisure, hobbies etc.) No No No
10
  • It is important to make connections among the
    contexts where several type of learning are
    acquired in order to promote
  • Personal satisfaction
  • Active citizenship
  • Social inclusion
  • Employability
  • In order to do it, is required to develop new
    validation processes and methods.

11
  • Several initiatives in European countries as
    described in the
  • European Inventory on validation of non formal
  • and informal learning
  • by Otero M.S., McCoshan A., Junge K., 2005,
    ECOTEC
  • Research Consulting
  • www.ecotec.com/europeaninventory/2005.html
  • Es Booklet in Finland, Digital Portfolio in
    Italy, etc.

12
  • Projects managed directly by E.C. and by CoE
  • European Portfolio of languages
  • European Portfolio for youth leaders and
    youth-workers

13
In.TraA project for recognising NF and IF
learning of young disadvantaged people
14
  • Aim recognition of informal competencies
    acquired by young disadvantaged people with a
    medium-low level of education
  • Target group known to have few literacy-
    competencies
  • Tool/method user friendly, not a software for
    self-assessment

15
  • A quotation from an interview with a young
    Italian drop-out
  • M well, since I am crazy about Bob Marley, the
    colours of the Reggaes flag are green, yellow
    and red. I have a wall full of Bobs posters, so
    I put green, yellow and red lamps .at the
    background I get reggaes flag. Its really
    cool! I get Bobs image, on a Reggae background.
  • Interv So you want to put them parallel to each
    other, like this (with my hands I show the
    parallel position of the lamps) in such a way
    that the three colours of the flag are appearing.
  • M yes

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  • Interv And which was .what do you have to
    invent? How to attach them to the wall?
  • M no, not how to attach them to the wall, I have
    to inventI mean I have to find a way to
    synchronize because you cant just put one here
    and another one thereI have to find out how to
    direct it.
  • Interv oh, oh, I understand. And you attached
    the lamps to the cable, everything ? Well done!
    And how did you do it, had you already learnt how
    to do it, had you learnt it here?
  • M my father taught me.

17
  • The interviews some results
  • The persons who taught the dropouts how to
    perform are friends, mothers, fathers, brothers
    and sisters, uncles and aunts, grandparents,
    parents in-law.
  • Many of them watched the expert performing an
    activity and then they stole some information
    about how to perform with their eyes and then
    copied him/her

18
  • They tried by themselves, asking the expert for
    some advice.
  • E.g. Maurizio ( 16 years old) - I saw some
    friends of mine while they were doing it, I liked
    it so I have tried.... at the beginning they
    helped me, then I did it by myself.
  • They learned to do things by themselves just by
    reading, trying, inventing, or doing.
  • E.g. Luca, 17 years old, - Once the TV remote
    control was broken, so I opened it because if
    something was broken I could solder it again....
    I tried by myself.

19
  • It is ironic that many young disadvantaged people
    trivialize what they learned in informal
    contexts, outside school, such as M. who says
  • Im able to knock down a wall, but I think
    everybody can he belittles himself.

20
  • Characteristics of IL
  • everyday life activities - learning result of
    meaningful activities (Rogoff and Lave 1984,
    Lave, 1988)
  • nature partly tacit (Polany, 1967) - hard to
    explain verbally and not even aware -

21
  • Learning a process in everyday lives
  • Origins research about everyday cognition and
    apprentiship in thinking (Rogoff e Lave, 1984
    Rogoff, 1991),
  • Learning as participating in situated
    activities which make sense for people involved.
  • Learning is a characteristic of every human life
    from its beginning to the end.

22
  • Learning in school
  • Different from the way we learn at school we
    learn concepts related to disciplines through
    verbal practices
  • Also evaluating practices are verbal

23
  • We suggest to take into consideration a piece
    written by L. Resnick, concerning how to evaluate
    learning acquired at work through a portfolio and
    by means of on demand assessment

24
  • L. Resnicks description of the portfolio
  • methodology of assessment to be used within
    educational and training contexts
  • A young woman needs to carry out evidences of her
    skills to gain a place as a senior apprentice in
    the workshop of a famous weaver.

25
  • 1. The young womans portfolio would include
  • womans works
  • a letter written by the craftsman in whose shop
    she did her initial apprentice work stamped with
    the establishments known seal
  • few words added by that craftsman - about the
    reliability and willingness of work of the
    aspirant.
  • certification from the Regional Association of
    Weavers from which the applicant came

26
  • 2. On-demand performance assessment the master
    weaver could check the applicants skills to
    produce work of the kind included in her
    portfolio by watching her producing similar
    pieces of work.
  • 3. A jury to examine portfolios and evaluate
    performances
  • 4. Standards explaining the criteria for the kind
    of work he should include

27
  • Another way of considering learning and
    assessment
  • Competence
  • being able to perform well in particular
    environments
  • Performance assessment
  • focused on certifying accomplishments rather
    than on identifying enduring traits of
    individuals

28
  • During the InTra project we could elaborate a
    tool for making learning visible not for
    assessing or evaluating- through a digital
    portfolio including
  • photos of the works/accomplishments
  • videos to make the procedures with which the
    young people carried out their works visible

29
  • Portfolio as an interesting tool to make visible
    IFL acquired by young disadvantaged people.
  • It is important to acknowledge the differences
    among assessment, recognition, validation and
    making visible, etc. !!

30
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31
To understand the characteristics of the
portfolio method we have to clarify some new
concepts elaborated in the field of psychology,
hence we have to connect to the recent hystory of
portfolio.
32
  • Contribution of cognitive psychology and
    sociocultural psychology to the science of
    evaluation
  • More complex ways of considering learning and
    knowing
  • brought to elaborate evaluating tools like the
    portfolio- that could fit for new assessing
    pourposes and processes (authentic assessment)

33
Authentic assessment
  • It is different from testing
  • performance assessment through the simulation of
    real, everyday situations

34
Authentic assessment
  • Questions asked to the students make sense for
    them, related to the syllabus (curriculum)
    covered in the course of the term
  • Activities of teaching/learning several,
    motivating/appealing

35
Portfolio broad definition
  • Significant collection of the works.
  • It gives evidence to the history of the efforts,
    of the advances and of the outcomes achieved in
    one or more learning fields or professional
    contexts.

36
Portfolio
  • A must for the process
  • the students participation in choosing the
    contents
  • The explanation of criteria for choosing the
    contents
  • Criteria for giving the credits
  • Evidence of students thinking about his/her
    learning process and outcomes

37
Differences among portfolios related to
  • Goals to be achieved through it
  • Contents selected
  • Who is the manager/owner of the portfolio

38
Working portfolio
  • Collection of products made in time
  • No systematic selection of the products with
    reasons explained
  • it helps in becoming more aware of the process of
    learning but not in critically analysing
    important moments in the learning process when
    the person increased (or not) in terms of
    learning
  • It is not assessment

39
  • During the construction of a portfolio there is
    assessment when the person
  • collects products,
  • thinks about his/her learning process
  • takes decisions concerning his/her future steps

40
  • To think about the practice (about his/her own
    products and learning processes) positively
    affects metacognitive and affective/motivational
    processes
  • increasing awareness, autonomy and responsibility
    concerning
  • practices, products, learning and about oneself
    as learning person and as actor becoming expert.

41
Digital instead of paper portfolio
  • It allows to give evidence both of the end
    product through photos of it, and of the process
    during which the product was made through videos.
  • Innovation for the disciplines of evaluation
    process evaluation no more distinguished from
    outcome evaluation (no more dichotomous)

42
The construction of a Digital Portfolio
43
  • Meeting and interviews between the tutor and the
    user.
  • Tools like a computer, a scanner, a videocamera,
    etc .
  • 5 main phases.

44
First Phase
  • Tools to be used A PC with Cd reader and word
    processor, a Cd Rom with an example of a digital
    portfolio already completed
  • Objectives to conclude a good working agreement
    and to start projecting the portfolio

45
First Phase
  • Activities to analyse the reasons why the user
    would like to make his/her own portfolio (goals
    to reach) to explain to the user the objectives
    of the process, describing what a digital
    portfolio exactly is, and the extent of both his
    and the tutors involvement, underlining the
    importance of the mutual collaboration.
  • It is useful at this point to illustrate the
    differences between the three types of learning.

46
Second Phase
  • Tools to be used a paper folder for each user, a
    computer, and sheets of paper
  • Objectives Analyse and choose the proofs of
    formal and non-formal learning to be inserted
    into the digital portfolio.

47
Second Phase
  • Activities
  • To Provide the user with a paper folder paper
    portfolio that will precede the construction of
    the digital version on Cd Rom.
  • To Prepare a Word file with his/her personal data

48
Second Phase
  • To analyse with the user his institutional
    education
  • To list on a sheet of paper the institutional
    certificates (formal learning)
  • To analyse non-formal learning activities
  • To think about evidences and to list them
    (Certificates, Self-declarations, References like
    letters from an employer, etc.)

49
Second Phase
  • To sum up all the proofs of the formal and
    non-formal learning
  • To suggest to comment on and to explain the
    reasons why s/he chose those evidences

50
Third Phase
  • Tools to be used Software Editor for
    presentations, a scanner, video captures
    software, a computer with Cd Rom reader, a Cd
    Rom, an interview model, sheets of paper.
  • Objective Begin to structure the digital
    portfolio and to realize a semi-structured
    interview in order to analyse the users informal
    learning and to favour the process leading to
    awareness.

51
Analysis of IFL through a semistructured
interview
  • A kind of research process in which both the
    tutor and the user are involved
  • The tutor supports the person in the collection
    of data concerning his informal competencies
    through a process of active interpersonal
    communication between the tutor and the young
    person.
  • Useful tools 2 interview models

52
  • Each interview model covers a specific context of
    informal training i.e. work and free time.
  • The models permit the tutor to take notes
    concerning the data collected during the
    semi-structured interview and to summarise
    consequently the various activity systems in
    which the young person is competent.

53
  • The tutor asks the user to describe the
    activities in which s/he has taken part in the
    various informal contexts and tries to get a
    particular insight into the methods and sources
    of learning, into the tools that the person has
    learned to use in order to realise those
    activities and into the type of products
    resulting from it, which are the visible results
    of these activities.

54
n. 1
Context Work Context Work Context Work Context Work Context Work
Activity Methods and Sources of Learning Tools Products Proof
Ex. Mechanic repaired scooters and automobiles Observing the boss at work and receiving lessons from him on this matter .. n. Scooter repaired . 1.A photo of the scooter before and after repair 2. A letter signed by the boss of the mechanic shop .
Ex. Helping father in family shop By asking questions to his father and receiving informative response . 1. 2. 3. n. . Lists of the materials to buy and the specifications of quantity of each product . 1.List of products ordered and bought 2. Photographs of boxes of materials ordered and delivered to the shop .
55
n. 2
Context Free Time (Hobbies, Sport, Home) Context Free Time (Hobbies, Sport, Home) Context Free Time (Hobbies, Sport, Home) Context Free Time (Hobbies, Sport, Home) Context Free Time (Hobbies, Sport, Home)
Activity Methods and sources of learning Tools Products Proof
Ex. Painting Observing friends, reading books titled Trying by myself. n ... painting 1 painting 2 . 1.photoraph of a painting 2.Video recording of the young person painting
Ex. Cooking Observing and listening to instructions from mother, sister etc. 1.. . 2.. .. 3.. n.. Cakes pasta .. 1.Photograph of a cake 2.Video recording of the young person cooking ..
Ex. Repairing the T.V. remote control Trying on his own to take it apart and put it back together again 1.. . 2.. .. 3.. n.. remote control being repaired . Photo and video of the remote control being repaired by the youth ..
56
  • At the end of the semi-structured interview
    the tutor summarises all activities that the user
    is capable of performing, highlighting the
    persons informal competencies and then asks him
    to choose which competencies are the most
    important in his opinion, and should be included
    in his portfolio.

57
  • One of the aspects to which the tutor must pay
    major attention when managing the interview for
    the analysis of competencies acquired in informal
    learning contexts regards the tendency of the
    young persons to marginalise the importance of
    such competencies.

58
  • The tutor must guide the person through the
    realisation of the digital portfolio without
    substituting his choices, realising a
    scaffolding activity (Wood D., Bruner J., Ross
    G., 1976), which means a psychological support
    (emotional and cognitive).

59
  • The proofs of informal competencies that can be
    inserted on the Cd Rom are
  • Letters from employers
  • Photographs of products produced in work-related
    activities and in free time
  • Video recordings.
  • The photos represent static recognition of
    products and therefore static proof of
    competencies that are acquired in informal
    contexts.

60
  • At the end of this phase the tutor will fix a new
    appointment with the user in which he will ask
    him to bring the products to be photographed or
    the photographs already taken with a digital
    camera.
  • The two must come to an agreement concerning the
    video to be recorded, in other words on which
    activity realized in informal contexts to be
    filmed, on the place where the filming should
    take place, etc.

61
Fourth Phase
  • Tools to be Used Camera and digital video
    camera, Cd Rom Computer with Cd reader
  • Objectives To choose, realize, and insert the
    photographs into the informal learning section
    of the digital portfolio, to record the video.

62
Fourth Phase
  • To make and to choose the photos to be included,
    and to choose the order of the photos,
  • with the support of the tutor s/he can write
    comments near each photo to clarify the type of
    product or the result of the activity that is
    being illustrated.
  • To make videos

63
Fifth Phase
  • Tools to be Used Cd Rom. and a computer with Cd
    Rom reader.
  • Objectives and activities To insert the video
    film on the Cd Rom, eventually making final
    modifications to the digital portfolio and to
    observe the final product to plann future steps

64
Tutor
  • Must be fully aware of the characteristics of
    informal learning (everyday learning) to be able
    to recognise immediately the fields of activity
    in which the person who is to realise the
    portfolio is competent, watching out all the time
    for eventual trivialisations.

65
Tutor
  • To be able to validate the personal
    characteristics and competencies that until that
    moment were not sufficiently valorised, hence
    s/he will be able to support the user in a
    process aimed at self-empowerment.
  • To support the young person during moments in
    which he/she encounters difficulties in verbally
    expressing him/herself

66
Tutor
  • The tutor must be well aware of the two
    characteristics that qualify the dialogue to
    realise the construction of the digital portfolio
    as a guidance counselling interview.
  • The first regards the perspective of temporal
    dimension of the dialogue between tutor and the
    young person, which must particularly focus on
    changes and on future plans.

67
Tutor
  • The second characteristic concerns the emotive
    support that the tutor should offer to the
    person, responding to his expectations of trust
    and confirmation of the rationality of his
    decisions ( Bastianoni P., Simonelli A., 2001).
    The tutor should demonstrate to be a trustworthy
    mediator.
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